Chapter 3

The fluorescent lights of the pack clinic flickered above me as my fingers danced across the keyboard. The midnight silence wrapped around me like a cloak, the only sound the soft clicking of keys and my racing heartbeat.

"Just a little deeper," I whispered to myself, sweat beading on my forehead as I navigated through the encrypted files.

Marcus Stone, our Pack Healer, was meticulous about security—but he'd never anticipated someone like me. Someone with nothing left to lose.

I'd been watching him enter his credentials for weeks now. Four more keystrokes and—

"Bingo," I breathed as the screen flashed green.

The Pack Healer's private database stretched before me like a digital treasure trove. I scrolled past routine checkups and minor injuries until I found what I was looking for.

"Alpha Damien Morgan - Confidential Medical Examination."

My fingers trembled as I clicked on the file. The document that opened before me was stamped with the highest classification: "EYES ONLY - ALPHA COMMAND."

"This can't be right," I whispered, scanning the contents.

But the diagnosis was unmistakable:

"Patient exhibits severe oligospermia with sperm count virtually nonexistent. Wolf appears to be functionally sterile."

The room spun around me as the implications hit like physical blows.

"Aviana's baby..." I whispered, my voice breaking in the empty clinic. "It can't be his."

Aria stirred inside me, her presence a comforting warmth against the ice flooding my veins. *We knew something was wrong. This confirms it.*

"But why would she lie?" I asked aloud, though I already knew the answer.

Power. Position. The Luna title she'd coveted for so long.

I needed more than just the medical report. I needed to hear it for myself.

---

The pack hospital's corridors were eerily quiet as I slipped through them an hour later. I'd spent precious minutes masking my scent—a skill I'd perfected in high school when hiding from bullies became a matter of survival.

A mixture of crushed herbs and a special oil from the pack's apothecary created a neutralizing barrier around my natural scent. As long as I didn't get too close or sweat excessively, I was effectively invisible to werewolf noses.

I spotted Aviana's golden hair through the glass doors of the VIP maternity ward. She was alone, her hand resting protectively over her still-flat stomach as she spoke to a nurse.

"The Alpha will be here shortly," she was saying, her voice carrying that false sweetness I'd grown to despise. "I'll be in the private consultation room."

Perfect.

I slipped into an empty room adjacent to the consultation room, leaving the door cracked just enough to hear their voices when they entered.

"Remember," I whispered to myself, pressing my palm against my racing heart. "Just listen. Don't react."

Minutes later, I heard Damien's heavy footsteps approaching. My body tensed involuntarily—the mate bond, even rejected, still pulled at something deep inside me.

"Is everything prepared?" His voice was low, intimate in a way that made my stomach twist.

"Of course," Aviana replied, her tone syrupy sweet. "I told them we needed privacy for... delicate matters."

Their laughter mingled as they entered the consultation room. I held my breath, straining to hear every word.

"I've been thinking about what you said," Damien's voice came through clearly now. "About Elowyn."

My heart stopped.

"What about her?" Aviana asked, though I could hear the smile in her voice.

"It's time I stopped pretending," Damien said, his voice hardening. "The bond is nothing but biology. I've fulfilled my obligation by keeping her around this long."

Aria whimpered inside me, the pain of his words cutting deeper than any physical wound.

"And now?" Aviana pressed, her voice eager.

"Now I sever it completely," Damien replied. "You're my choice, Aviana. You always have been."

The silence that followed was filled with unspoken promises that shattered what little hope I had left.

"I only kept her around out of duty," Damien continued, his voice dropping lower. "The Moon Goddess's whim means nothing compared to what I want. What we want."

"And the pack?" Aviana asked.

"They'll accept it," he said confidently. "They always do."

I pressed my hand against my mouth to stifle the sob building in my throat. Five years of waiting, of enduring, of believing—all for nothing.

"I've played the dutiful Alpha long enough," Damien said, his voice cold and final. "It's time I chose my own destiny."

I backed away from the door, my legs trembling beneath me. The truth was worse than anything I could have imagined.

He had never intended to honor our bond.

He had never truly wanted me at all.

As I stumbled into the hallway, one thought crystallized in my mind with perfect clarity: This wasn't just about rejection anymore.

This was war.

Chapter 4

Three days had passed since I'd rejected Damien. Three days of agony as the mate bond tore itself apart inside me. Three days of planning my next move.

I sat cross-legged on my bed, staring at the ceiling of my quarters—quarters that would no longer be mine once Aviana officially became Luna. The pack house was already buzzing with preparations for their ceremony.

Aria stirred restlessly within me. *He's coming.*

"I know," I whispered, catching the familiar scent moments before a knock sounded at my door.

I didn't need to ask who it was. The mate bond, even in its dying state, still recognized him.

"Elowyn?" Damien's voice carried that authoritative edge I'd grown to hate. "We need to talk."

Against my better judgment, I opened the door. He stood there, immaculately dressed in a tailored suit that probably cost more than most pack members made in a month. In his hands was a velvet box.

"You look terrible," he said, his amber eyes taking in my disheveled appearance.

"Thanks to you," I replied, leaning against the doorframe to keep myself upright. The rejection was taking its toll physically—my muscles ached, my appetite was gone, and exhaustion clung to me like a second skin.

Damien pushed past me into the room, his aura filling the space and making it hard to breathe. "I brought you something."

He opened the velvet box to reveal a diamond necklace that caught the light in dazzling sparkles. It was exquisite—and completely meaningless.

"Do you think this will fix everything?" I asked, my voice hollow.

"It's a start," he said, stepping closer. "Elowyn, we need to talk about what happened."

But as he approached, something hit me like a physical blow. My nose wrinkled involuntarily as a wave of sickeningly sweet floral scent washed over me.

"Is that—" I began, my stomach turning.

"What?" Damien frowned, following my gaze to his jacket.

I stepped closer, inhaling deeply. There was no mistaking it—Aviana's signature floral perfume clung to him like a second skin. It was in his hair, on his clothes, even on his neck where her lips had likely pressed against his skin.

"You came straight from her bed," I said, the words tasting like ash in my mouth.

Damien's expression hardened. "That's not—"

"Don't lie to me," I cut him off, my voice surprisingly steady despite the nausea rising in my throat. "I can smell her all over you."

He had the decency to look uncomfortable, but not remorseful. "This isn't about Aviana."

"No," I agreed, stepping back from him. "This is about you. About how you think you can buy me back with diamonds after five years of humiliation."

Damien's jaw tightened. "Elowyn, be reasonable. We have a bond—"

"A bond you've violated at every turn," I finished for him.

He reached for me, but I flinched away. "Please, just listen—"

His words cut off abruptly as his hand flew to his temple, eyes widening in alarm.

"Damien?" I asked, instinctively taking a step forward despite everything.

"Aviana," he whispered, his face paling. "She's in pain. Something's wrong with the baby."

My blood ran cold. "What?"

"She's having cramps," he said, already backing toward the door. "I have to go."

"Wait," I called after him. "How do you know? Is she with the healer?"

But Damien was already halfway out the door. "Mind-link," he threw over his shoulder. "She needs me."

And just like that, our connection snapped shut as he deliberately broke our mind-link, leaving a hollow ache where his presence had been.

The diamond necklace lay forgotten on my bed as I stared at the closed door, a bitter laugh escaping my lips.

"He didn't even hesitate," I whispered to Aria.

*He never does,* she replied sadly.

---

The southern border of pack territory was usually quiet this time of evening. I'd chosen this spot carefully—far enough from the main pack house to think clearly, but still within our boundaries.

I needed air. Space to breathe away from the suffocating weight of Damien's betrayal and Aviana's triumphant smiles.

"Elowyn."

I whirled around at the sound of her voice, my heart pounding against my ribs.

Aviana stood a few feet away, her hand protectively cradling her still-flat stomach. But something was different about her—the calculated sweetness was gone, replaced by something colder.

"What do you want?" I asked, taking an instinctive step back.

"Justice," she replied simply. "You've ruined everything."

Before I could respond, movement in the trees caught my eye. A man emerged from the shadows—tall, muscular, with the unmistakable wild aura of a rogue.

"Who is this?" I demanded, my wolf rising to the surface in warning.

Aviana's lips curved into a cruel smile as she stepped closer to him. "This is Gabriel Cross. The father of my child."

The world seemed to tilt beneath my feet as understanding dawned.

"And he's going to help me get rid of you," she added softly. "Once and for all."

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